Macau in Chinese Foreign Policy during the Cultural Revolution, 1966-1968 Moises Silva Fernandes Abstract: Despite the abrupt collapse of Portuguese power in Macau and the political turmoil that engulfed China during the Cultural Revolution, the Chinese leadership did its utmost from 1 966 to 1 968 to keep Macau under Portuguese administration. China intervened politically and militarily to prevent the fall of the Portuguese administration in 1 966 and signed an agreement with the Macau Portuguese administration to settle the crisis on 29 January 1967. However, the ongoing political crisis back in mainland China contributed to further political instability throughout 1967. Beijing became so apprehensive with the precarious situation in the tiny enclave that it had to intervene once again in 1 968 to restore the status quo ante. The impact of the Chinese Cultural Revolution in the Portuguese-admin- istered enclave of Macau has been a much neglected theme, notwithstand- ing the fact that it was one of the first foreign places to be hard hit by the unfolding events in China. As soon as the territory became engulfed in political turmoil, mainland China tried militarily to prevent an invasion by rebel Red Guards. For nearly a two-month period, the People’s Libera- tion Army (PLA) maintained a tight security ring around Macau, which ultimately helped to bring about a political settlement between the Guang- dong Government Foreign Affairs Bureau and the Portuguese adminis- tration, on the one hand, and the Anti-Portuguese Struggle Committee, also known locally as the Committee of Thirteen, on the other. The two - Poruguese Literary & Cultural Studies 17/18 ( 2010 ): 209 24 . © University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. 210 PORTUGUESE LITERARY & CULTURAL STUDIES 17/18 agreements, signed on 29 January 1967, basically envisaged the return to normality in Macau. The ongoing political instability in mainland China and in Hong Kong reignited, however, the Cultural Revolution in Macau. In April 1967, there was a major confrontation between the Committee ofThirteen and the Maca- nese community in which the latter lost. The following month, the British Consulate and the Macau Branch of the Hong Kong Immigration Depart- ment were shut down after a thirteen-day harassment campaign. In June 1967, it was the turn of the Portuguese military garrison. A mutiny took place within its midst over the attitude that the Portuguese administration should take towards the Committee ofThirteen. The high command prevailed over junior officers and the Chief of Defense Staff had to apologize before the Committee ofThirteen and to pay compensation for the wounded Chinese. Finally, in the fall of 1 967, the Committee of Thirteen tried to kowtow the Catholic Church, but failed. In this paper I will analyze the emergence of these incidents and how China did its utmost to re-establish some form of normality in Macau, in December 1966 and January 1967. Despite its efforts, the situation deteriorated quite substantially throughout 1967. This state of affairs forced the Chinese cen- tral government to take several measures to restore the status quo ante in the Portuguese-administered enclave from late 1967 up to 1968. The Taipa and Macau incidents The incident that triggered Macau’s turmoil occurred on Taipa Island, located on the southern part of Macau’s peninsula. After waiting nearly three months for a building permit from the Island’s Town Hall, on the morning of 1 5 November 1966, around a 100 youths started to dismantle without any authorization three dilapidated houses in the village of Taipa. This led to a standstill for seven hours between Chinese youngsters and the Public Security Police. To put an end to this situation, the Second Commandant of the Public Security Police ordered an intervention for four to five minutes. Although there were only two slightly wounded demonstrators, in order to mobilize the Chinese community against the Portuguese administration they alleged that several people had been injured. This scheme, however, failed. The Chinese community did not rise against the Portuguese administration (Fernandes, Macau 1 17-28). Things started to change when the radicals in China were able to take con- trol of the propaganda machine, in late November. Immediately, the events PARTS OF ASIA 211 in Macau were exploited to mobilize people. Between 30 November and 2 FERNANDES December 1 966, several demonstrations took place inside the Macau Govern- ment House. They set the stage for the violent confrontations that would take SILVA place on 3 and 4 December (Fernandes, Macau 138). In the meantime, the Portuguese administration kept making concessions MOISTS to the local Chinese elite, although their desperate calls to the latter to set up an Inquiry Commission, with Chinese representatives, did not make any progress. On Saturday, 3 December, local Chinese pupils, instigated by the pro-Beijing business elite, ransacked two Portuguese institutions (the Macau City Hall and the Public Notary’s Office, located on the main floor of the Holy House of Mercy) and a major symbol of Macanese identity (the statue of Colonel Vicente de Nicolau Mesquita). 1 The Public Security Polices failure to handle the riot led Brigadier Nobre de Carvalho, Governor of Macau, to proclaim a state of siege and to order the intervention of the Portuguese military garrison. The follow- ing day, the pro-Beijing Chinese elite directed its violence towards local Chinese associations loyal to the Guomindang. The outcome of these two tumultuous days was 8 dead, 212 injured, and 62 detainees (Fernandes, Macau 131). Chinas reaction to the events was quite terse. Guangdong’s Deputy Gov- ernor, Zeng Sheng, told Ho Yin, the pro-Beijing leading businessman, that “the Chinese authorities did not approve the violence which has been used by the demonstrators, yesterday and today, nor the looting of Macau City Hall and the loss caused to public and private property” (Fernandes, Macau 167). Besides this admonition, China persuaded the local Chinese elite to set up a “Struggle Committee against Portuguese Persecution,” locally known as the Committee of Thirteen. To ensure that the latter had “revolutionary” cre- dentials and to avoid the accusation of being “revisionists,” the local business- men appointed the leader of the pro-Beijing Macau General Association of Labour, Leong Pui, chairman of the Committee ofThirteen. The trade union leader was a secure bet, for many reasons. First, he was a carpenter by trade, a former police officer in the Macau Public Security Police, and an ex-refugee from mainland China. Second, his organization was aligned, since 1 October 1950, with the official All-China Federation ofTrade Unions. Third, he was a member of the Board of Directors of the influential Macau Chinese Chamber of Commerce. Fourth, he received instructions from Guangzhou through Ma Man-kei, a key CCP leader in Macau (Fernandes, Macau 178-79). In the meantime, the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) intervened mili- tarily with two objectives in mind: first, to prevent an invasion of the 212 PORTUGUESE LITERARY & CULTURAL STUDIES 17/18 Portuguese-administered enclave by rebel Red Guards; second, to stabilize the political situation in Macau. General Huang Yongsheng, commandant of the Guangzhou Military Region, and the insecure party and government leaders in Guangdong, Zhao Ziyang, first secretary of the Guangdong CCP, and Lin Liming, Guangdong’s acting governor, respectively, imposed a military security ring around Macau to prevent the territory’s invasion by rebel Red Guards (Fer- nandes, Macau 181-82). On the afternoon of 3 December, the Chinese military garrisons in Guang- zhou and Shiqi came under a “special prevention regime.” Meanwhile, rebel Red Guards on Zhonghsan Island moved rapidly towards the Chinese side of the Barrier Gate, the border between mainland China and Macau. In order to stop the invasion of the enclave, the PLA ordered the stationing of 3,000 troops loyal to the Guangzhou Regional Commandant (Fernandes, Macau 182-91). Moreover, the PLA Navy deployed a naval force expedition made up of eight rapid motorized gunboats, “primarily Shanghai, Shantou, and smaller classes” (Muller 147), which came from nearby Chinese naval bases. The placement of four navy frigates near the Outer Harbor and four patrols in the Inner Harbor of Macau Peninsula was an attempt to avoid an infiltration by rebel Reds Guards with rubber boats or motorized junks. This tight security grip was tested on 4 December. A flotilla of rebel Red Guards’ armed junks, which was navigating towards Macau, was instructed by the PLA Navy to stop to be inspected. However, they did not obey. After some verbal warnings, the PLA Navy opened fire. Some of the junks that car- ried weapons and ammunitions exploded. The blasts were so violent that they were heard in Macau. Besides this naval intervention, the PLA Army also got involved. According to the Portuguese Overseas Minister, Silva Cunha: An enormous crowd of “Red Guards” concentrated near our territory, right in front of the Barrier Gate. The Governor warned me by telephone. If an attack were launched, it would be impossible to resist militarily. I warned the Defense Minister, and we spent the whole evening in the Overseas Office waiting for the worst. [...] When the “Red Guards” demonstration was held, the PLA’s troops occupied imme- diately positions to avoid the invasion of our territory. (Cunha 250-51) The Governor’s message was confirmed by the deployment of new PLA Army reinforcements on 3 December. The 5,000 soldiers concentrated in the vicinity of Macau were reinforced with 10,000 extra troops near the Barrier PARTS OF ASIA 213 Gate border, the Ducks Channel, and on the eastern side of the neighboring FERNANDES Wanzai, Xiaohengqin , Dahengqin islands ( La Cite, 21 Dec. 1966), increasing the total number to nearly 15,000 troops.
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